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Edwina Booth

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Occupation
  
Actress

Years active
  
1928–1932


Name
  
Edwina Booth

Role
  
Actress

Edwina Booth wwwdoctormacrocomImagesBooth20EdwinaAnnexN

Full Name
  
Josephine Constance Woodruff

Born
  
September 13, 1904 (
1904-09-13
)
Provo, Utah, U.S.

Died
  
May 18, 1991, Long Beach, California, United States

Movies
  
Trader Horn, The Vanishing Legion, The Last of the Mohicans, Trapped in Tia Juana

Spouse
  
Reinhold Fehlberg (m. 1959–1984), Leo Higham (m. 1951–1957), Anthony Shuck (m. 1927)

Similar People
  
B Reeves Eason, Ford Beebe, W S Van Dyke

Movie legends edwina booth


Edwina Booth (September 13, 1904 – May 18, 1991) was an American actress. She is best known for the 1931 film Trader Horn, during the filming of which she contracted an illness which effectively ended her movie career.

Contents

Edwina Booth Edwina Booth Horoscope Virgo and Zodiac Rooster

The Vanishing Legion Ep.4, The Fatal Message - Harry Carey, Edwina Booth, Frankie Darro


Early life

She was born Josephine Constance Woodruff in Provo, Utah on September 13, 1904, to James Lloyd Woodruff and Josephine Booth Woodruff. She was the oldest of their five children. Her father was a doctor. She suffered from hypoglycemia, which left her with little energy and kept her from completing any full year of school. Her family moved to Venice, California, in 1921 due to her father contracting influenza. As a young adult, Woodruff watched many movies during her free time.

Edwina Booth Edwina Booth Closeups and Longshots

Her stage name was Edwina Booth: her favorite granduncle was named Edwin and her grandfather's last name was Booth.

Career

Edwina Booth Edwina Booth Wikipedia

Booth was discovered while sunbathing on a California beach by director E. J. Babille. He gave her a business card and she went to the Metropolitan Studio to take her first screen test a few days later. She got her first part in 1926 in a silent film. In 1928, Booth was cast in the Dorothy Arzner-directed Manhattan Cocktail. She was on vacation following a 1927 stage appearance when film director E. Mason Hopper saw her and offered her a part in a Marie Prevost picture. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) was impressed with her, and cast Booth in supporting roles.

Edwina Booth Edwina Booth Mormonism The Mormon Church Beliefs Religion

Her chance for stardom came when the studio cast her in its new jungle epic Trader Horn opposite Harry Carey. MGM gave the production a fairly large budget, and sent cast and crew on location in East Africa. Until 1929, the only films shot in Africa were travelogues, but MGM was hoping the idea of "location shooting" might increase the film's commercial appeal. The crew was inexperienced and ill-equipped for filming in Africa, a problem exacerbated by MGM's last-minute decision to shoot the film with sound.

Edwina Booth The Edwin Booth Family Collection Oviatt Library

When Booth left the United States, she had a fever of 104. In Africa, she had to cope with the heat and insects, and she got cut by elephant grass. While shooting the film, she wore clothing made of monkey fur and lion's teeth. Booth contracted malaria during shooting. Booth also suffered a sunstroke and fell out of a tree. (In an interview with Dick Cavett in the 1970s, Katharine Hepburn said Booth contracted schistosomiasis, and incorrectly stated that Booth had died.) Her role in the film as "The White Goddess" required her to be scantily clad, likely increasing her susceptibility. Production went on for several months (much longer than average production time in those days), and the film wasn't released until 1931. Despite many problems with the film's production, Trader Horn was a success, securing an Academy Award nomination for Best Picture.

Booth fared much worse; it took her six years to fully recover physically. She sued MGM for over a million dollars, claiming she had been provided with inadequate protection and inadequate clothing during the African shoot. She claimed she had been forced to sunbathe nude for extended periods during filming. The case received a lot of attention in the tabloids and was eventually settled out of court. According to some sources, the terms were not disclosed; however, Brigham Young University archives indicate she settled for $35,000. amounting to at least $600,000 in today's money.

Booth's acting career never recovered from the MGM debacle. Neither MGM nor the other major studios had any intentions of employing her, which created an opportunity for producer Nat Levine of the low-budget Mascot Pictures. Levine saw a chance to capitalize on the success of Trader Horn by reuniting its stars Harry Carey and Edwina Booth for two adventure serials, The Vanishing Legion and The Last of the Mohicans. The films were successful within their limited market, but failed to propel Booth's movie career forward.

Later years

In 1935, Booth and her father went to Europe to seek medical treatment. When she returned to the United States, she was confined to a dark room. She refused to talk of her time as a movie star later in her life. Booth withdrew completely from the public eye, although she continued to receive fan mail for the rest of her life. She declared that she would be dedicating all of her future leisure and a large proportion of her earnings to the alleviation of human suffering, "My years of illness have not been wasted," she informed the local press. "I have learned to love mankind." She became more active in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and worked in the Los Angeles California Temple.

Marriages

Booth was married three times. Anthony Shuck, her first husband, had their marriage annulled soon after her return from Africa. She married her second husband, Urial Leo Higham, on November 21, 1951; he died in 1957. Her third husband was Reinold Fehlberg. They were married from 1959 until his death in 1983. There were many false rumors and reports of her demise until her actual death in 1991. She had no children. She died of heart failure May 18, 1991, in Long Beach, California. and is buried in Santa Monica's Woodlawn Cemetery.

Filmography

Actress
1932
Trapped in Tia Juana as
Dorothy Brandon
1932
The Last of the Mohicans as
Cora Munro
1932
The Midnight Patrol as
Joyce Greeley
1931
The Vanishing Legion as
Caroline Hall
1931
Trader Horn as
Nina Trent - the White Goddess
1929
Our Modern Maidens as
Undetermined Role (uncredited)
1928
Manhattan Cocktail
Archive Footage
1944
Some of the Best (Documentary) as
Nina Trent - The White Goddess in Trader Horn (uncredited)

References

Edwina Booth Wikipedia